Abstract's details

CryoSat Plus For Oceans: an ESA Project for CryoSat-2 Data Exploitation Over Ocean - Summary of Results and Scientific Roadmap

David Cotton (Satellite Oceanographic Consultants Ltd, United Kingdom)

CoAuthors

Ole Andersen (DTU Space, Denmark); Francois Boy (CNES, France); Mathilde Cancet (Noveltis, France); Salvatore Dinardo (ESA, Italy); Christine Gommenginger (NOC, UK); Alejandro Egido (STARLAB, Spain); M. Joana Fernandes (University of Porto, Portugal); Pablo Nilo Garcia (isardSAT, Spain); Bruno Lucas (ESA, Italy); Thomas Moreau (CLS, France); Marc Naeije (TU Delft, The Netherlands); Remko Scharroo (Altimetrics LLC, The Netherlands); Lars Stenseng (DTU Space, Denmark); Jérôme Benveniste (ESA, Italy)

Event: 2014 Ocean Surface Topography Science Team Meeting

Session: Instrument Processing: Measurement and retracking (SAR and LRM)

Presentation type: Type Oral

Contribution: PDF file

Abstract:

The ESA Cryosat-2 mission is the first space mission to carry a radar altimeter that can operate in Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mode. It thus provides the first opportunity to test and evaluate, using real data, the significant potential benefits of SAR altimetry for ocean applications.

The objective of the Cryosat Plus for Oceans (CP4O) project is to develop and evaluate new ocean products from CryoSat -2 data and so maximize the scientific return of CryoSat-2 over oceans. The main focus of CP4O has been on the additional measurement capabilities that are offered by the SAR mode of the SIRAL altimeter, with further work in developing improved geophysical corrections.

CP4O has developed SAR based ocean products for application in four themes: Open Oceans, Coastal Oceans, Polar Oceans and Sea Floor Topography. The team has developed a number of new processing schemes and compared and evaluated the resultant data products. This work has clearly demonstrated the improved ocean measuring capability offered by SAR mode altimetry and has also added significantly to our understanding of the issues around the processing and interpretation of SAR altimeter echoes.

The project finishes in the summer of 2014, so this paper presents an overview of the major results and outlines a proposed roadmap for the further development and exploitation of these results in operational and scientific applications.

The results are of course also highly relevant to support the planning for future missions, including Sentinel-3 and Jason-CS.

The "Cryosat Plus for Oceans" (CP4O) project has been supported by ESA and CNES, with the ESA support from the Support To Science Element Programme.
 

Oral presentation show times:

Room Start Date End Date
Ballroom Tue, Oct 28 2014,16:51 Tue, Oct 28 2014,17:03
David Cotton
Satellite Oceanographic Consultants Ltd
United Kingdom
d.cotton@satoc.eu